Osama bin Laden "trusted in Allah for his protection" but made sure
to wear a cowboy hat on his walks around his compound in Abbottabad,
Pakistan, "to avoid detection from above." That's according to the
blockbuster final report of a Pakistani commission that looked into the
circumstances surrounding the May 2011 raid in which U.S. commandos
killed the leader of al-Qaida. The report was obtained and published by Al-Jazeera English.
The so-called Abbottabad Commission comprised Pakistan's most senior
supreme court judge, a retired inspector general of police, a retired
army lieutenant general, and the director general of the Institute of
Strategic Studies in Islamabad. Its task was to investigate how bin
Laden managed to live quietly in that garrison town ("a kilometer in a
straight line from the Pakistan Military Academy," the report notes) and
how U.S. special operations forces were able to conduct the covert raid
without interference from Pakistan government forces. Key question: Was
Pakistan's government guilty of incompetence or complicity in each
case?
It's a fascinating read, capturing the would-need-two-upgrades-to-be-merely-tense relations between the U.S. and Pakistan—a country U.S. officials call crucial to the war on terrorism but which needs to do more to crack down on Islamist extremists.
The independent commission's assessment of Pakistan's government is brutal. Among its findings:
--"The whole episode of the US assassination mission of May 2, 2011
and the Pakistan government's response before, during and after appears
in large part to be a story of complacency, ignorance, negligence,
incompetence, irresponsibility and possibly worse at various levels
inside and outside the government," the report says starting on page
333.
--Dismantling the operations of both the CIA and Islamist extremist
networks on Pakistani soil must be an "urgent national priority" (page
331).
--Civilian casualties from American drone strikes must be judged "deliberate and criminal" (page 328).
--The CIA stopped notifying Pakistan's government of high-value extremist targets on its territory in 2005 (page 325).
--It calls the bin Laden raid "illegal" and a symptom of America's
"contemptuous disregard for Pakistan's sovereignty, independence, and
territorial integrity in the arrogant certainty of its unmatched
military might" (page 305).
--But a more effective Pakistan government could have spared its people their "avoidable humiliation" (page 305).
--How did Pakistan's intelligence services miss the presence of the
world's most wanted fugitive? "It was probably more a case of
negligence, inefficiency and incompetence rather than complicity" (page
299).
Repeated entries note speculation that Pakistan abetted the raid with
at least a wink-and-nod acceptance, but the commission found no
evidence for that claim. On page 292, the report notes that Pakistan's
air defense radars, which might have picked up the Navy SEAL team
helicopters, were in "rest" mode because it was "not economical" to have
them on constantly.
But among the most interesting nuggets in the report are the
descriptions, based on interviews with bin Laden relatives living with
him at the compound, of his life in hiding.
Bin Laden was "not fond of possessions" and moved into the house with
just three summer outfits and three winter outfits. He also had a black
jacket and two sweaters, the report said. Why didn't bin Laden have
tougher protection? He "trusted in Allah for his protection" and had
just two bodyguards.
Still, "when OBL moved about the Compound he wore a cowboy hat to
avoid detection from above," the report said on page 41. When he felt
unwell, he relied on "traditional Arab medicine." He "did not discuss
political matters with his wives." But Bin Laden "personally saw to the
religious education of his grandchildren and supervised their play time,
which included cultivating vegetable plots with simple prizes for best
performances."
The witnesses said that the Americans made off with a hard disc that belonged to bin Laden—but also with what the report calls 20 gold “biscuits” and two gold lockets with emeralds (page 40).
“They also took a purse that contained the will of Osama bin Laden,” the report says.
One of bin Laden's wives “had previously read the will but did not
wish to divulge the details. She said it was not political and pertained
only to personal and family related matters. Other reports suggested
that the will said his children should not seek the leadership of
Al-Qaida.”
No comments:
Post a Comment